Ralf Wildenhues <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> +# $FILE_NAME
> +# shell_quote ($FILE_NAME)
> +# ------------------------
> +# If the string $S is a well-behaved file name, simply return it.
> +# If it contains white space, quotes, etc., quote it, and return
> +# the new string.
> +sub shell_quote($)
> +{
> + my ($s) = @_;
> + if ($s =~ m![^\w+/.,-]!)
> + {
> + # Convert each single quote to '\''
> + $s =~ s/\'/\'\\\'\'/g;
> + # Then single quote the string.
> + $s = "'$s'";
> + }
> + return $s;
> +}
A nit: if the goal is to quote only those file names requiring
quoting, then this quotes too often; e.g., it quotes @ in file names.
I think the only characters you should need to worry about in practice
are:
\t \n \r space ! " # $ % & ' ( ) * ; < > ? [ \ ^ ` | ~